The acceptances for the US Open Junior ChampionshipsWho starts on Sunday 31 August, were released today, with eight of the ITF top 10 boys and seven of the ITF -to -top 10 girls who come in.
Leading both lists are the current ITF No. 1 juniors, Wimbledon champion Ivanov van Bulgaria and Wimbledon -finalist Julieta Pareja.
The Other Top 10 Boys Are: No. 2 Andres Santamarta Roig of Spain, No. 4 Alexander Vasilev or Bulgaria, No. 5 Benjamin Willwerth, No. 7 Oskari Paldanius, No. 8 Yannick Alexandrescou of Romania, Who Just won a J300 Last Week in Poland, No. 9 and Roland Garros finalist Max Schoenhaus of Germany and No. 10 and Roland Garros Champion Niels McDonald, who has just picked up his first ATP Challenger victory as a wildcard in his home country of Germany.
Mist his Jacopo Vasami from Italy, number 3 ranked junior, and Australian Open Boys champion Henry Bernet from Switzerland, who has just returned to the competition on the ITF Men’s World Tour Tour after a five-month-old Let-Off.
The 10 American boys on the acceptance list are Jack Kennedy, Jagger Leach, Ronit Karki, Keaton Hance, Noah Johnston, Jack Secord, Jack Sateterfield, Maxwell Exsted, Dominick Mosejczuk and Maximus Dussault.
Two players received main table submissions based on the ITF Top 80 -Extraoral for not different regions: Karim Bennani (Africa) and Yannik Alvarez from Puerto Rico (Central -America and Caribbean). Nicolas Arseneault from Canada, an emerging first -year student in Kentucky, received access based on his 638 ATP ranking. Arseneault received a wildcard and won a round on the ATP Masters 1000 in Toronto this weekend.
The initial boys who arrange the Cutoff for the main draw was 49.
American boys who are currently eligible are Ryan Cozad, Gavin Goode, Matisse Farzam and Michael Antonius.
The initial boys who arrange the Cutoff for qualifying was 79.
In addition to no. 1 Pareja, the other top 10 girls in draw no. 2 Emerson Jones of Australia, no. 4 Hannah Klugman van Groot -Britain, no. 5 Kristina Penickova, 7 Wimbledon champion Mia Pohankova van Slovakia, no. 8 Luna Vujovic of Servia.
Roland Garros champion and no. 3 Tagger Trade or Australian. 6 Sonobe steps from Japan and no. 10 Costovic from Serbia.
As has been the case with the previous two Junior Slams, the American girls in the main drawing are a small number. In addition to Pareja and Penickova, the other three main drawing acceptations of the US are Thea Frodin, Annika Penickova and Maya Iyengar.
Seventeen-year-old Alisa Oktiabreva van Russia, who has not played a junior event since the Orange Bowl 2023, received the main table entry based on her WTA ranking order of 347. She is 23-6 this year on the Pro Circuit, after recently bought the quarterfinals of a WTA 125 in Italy.
The main direction of the first girls was 50.
Americans Leena Friedman, Capucine Jauffret and Ishika Ashar are in qualifying, with the ranking Cutoff 85.
Two girls received eligible places based on their regions that were not represented. Alyssa James from Jamaica and Jahnie van Zyl van Zuid -Africa received those places based on their ranking in the ITF Junior Top 150.
The acceptances for the ITF J300 in College Park Marylandwhich I will treat again this year, were also published today.
The top two of the ITF rankings of boys and girls do not play it, with no. 4 Hannah Klugman and no. 5 Benjamin Willwerth who leads the lists. There are three top 10 girls and five top 10 boys who are currently introduced.
The initial ranking for main table was 61 for the boys and 88 for the girls.
As announced earlier this month, there was extra news about the court case of Reese Brantmeier who challenged the prohibition of the NCAA of College tennis players who accepted prize money, in which judge Catherine Eagles certified two classes of tennis players who could benefit from the court case.
Of the very thorough coverage of the case in this article through the Carolina Journal:
The first covers every player who has been participating in the I Tennis division since 19 March 2020, or was not eligible to compete for NCAA prize money restrictions. That class comprises 12,000 players, according to the judicial order.
The second class covers every player who ‘voluntarily forfeited’ the prize money in the same period. The lawyers of Brantmeier have “provided evidence that there are more than 60 members of that class, Eagles wrote.
Whether this decision will push the NCAA to a settlement, instead of another long and precious lawsuit, can still be seen.
The USTA Pro Circuit has three tournaments this week, with a ATP Challenger 75 and one W75 in Lexington Kentucky and one M25 in Edwardsville Illinois.
The first round is almost completed at the Challenger, with top seeds Nishsh Basavareddy (Stanford) who won his opening match yesterday and number 2 seed Eliizirri (Texas) who beat the qualification Stefan Dostanic (USC, Wake Forest) 6-3, 6-2. Spizzirri was captured in an unusual series of circumstances last week, when he made it in qualifying with the Masters 1000 in Toronto, but could not play because he was still in the Bloomfield Hills Challenger. He was automatically withdrawn from Lexington because he was eligible in Toronto, so he needed a wildcard to play there this week.
Other Americans until the second round are no. 6 Seed Zachary Svajda, who beat the qualification Alex Rybakov (TCU) 6-2, 7-6 (10) and ATP College-rapider Michael Zheng (Columbia), who defeated Bloomfield Hills-Finist Andres Martin (Georgia Tech) 6-4, 6-4 today. The winner of tonight between qualifying Aidan Mayo and no. 7 Seed Christopher Eanks (Georgia Tech) will be the fifth American in the second round.
During the Women’s Tournament in Lexington, qualifications include Americans Alana Smith (NC State), Fiona Crawley (North Carolina), Katrina Scott, Eyn Cayetano (USC), Lea Ma (Georgia) and Tori Osuigwe (NC State). The final qualifying match between Usue Arconada and Katie Swan van Groot -Britain is still underway.
Amelia Honer (UC-Santa Barbara), Kayla Day, Victoria Hu (Princeton) and Zoe Hammond (Kentucky) received Wildcards, with Honer opposite top seeds Anastasia Zakharova van Russia in the first round. Varvara Lepchenko is the number 2 seed and plays a qualifying match in the first round Wednesday.
Warmte has interrupted the M25 in Edwardsville, but all qualifying competitions are completed.
Americans qualify are Braden Shick (NC State), Nicolas Kotzen (Columbia), Nicholas Steiglehner (Michigan) and Jonah Braswell (Texas).
Wild cards were awarded to Alexander Razeghi (Stanford), who beat Junior exempt Kaylan Bigun (UCLA) 2-6, 6-2, 6-4 in the first round; Aidan Kim (Ohio State), Oliver Okonkwo (Illinois) and Spencer Johnson (UCLA). Tyler Zink (Oklahoma State) is the best seed, with Leandro Riedi from Switzerland the number 2 seed.
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